Doctoral studies > Teaching staff

Is an ICREA Research Professor in the Department of Philosophy at the UAB. His research focuses on the relations between philosophy and psychology throughout history, and on epistemology. His main interest is in Kant’s philosophy of the (human) sciences and today’s debates on the psychology of rationality.

Early Modern Philosophy, esp. Kant; Philosophy and History of Psychology; Philosophy of Science; Epistemology

The Rationality Debate in Psychology: Its Implications for Philosophical Naturalism

(guest ed.) Crisis? What Crisis? Crisis Debates in Psychology (thematic volume). Studies in History and Philosophy of Science.

The ‘Crisis’ of a Science: What Does It Matter whether It’s an Actor’s or an Analyst’s Category? (Introduction to a thematic volume on Crisis Debates in Psychology) Studies in History and Philosophy of Science.

Bühler’s Crisis of Psychology and the Prehistory of Popper’s Critical Rationalism. Studies in the History and Philosophy of Science

(2012) (guest ed., with A. Mülberger) Psychology, a Science in Crisis? A Century of Reflections and Debates. Special section of Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences, 43, pp. 425-521.

(in press, 2013) Analytic and synthetic method in the human sciences: A hope that failed. Ideologies of Epistemology in Early Modern Europe. Ed. by T. Demeter. Leiden: Brill.

(in press, 2013) What did Kant mean by and why did he adopt a cosmopolitan point of view in history? Kant and Philosophy from a Cosmopolitan Point of View: XIth International Kant-Congress. Ed. by S. Bacin, A. Ferrarin, C. LaRocca & M. Ruffing. Berlin: De Gruyter.